"Back Home Again in Indiana" Parke County, Indiana, the Covered Bridge Capital. Rockville, Indiana, plus McCallister's covered bridge and Bridgeton Mill and Covered Bridge. October 24, 2014, about 12:30 pm. Canon T3i. Photos by Carl Morrison of MoKnowsPhotos.com. Fellow photographer Bob Williams. We were traveling from Huntley, Illinois to Indianapolis, Indiana for our 50th Class Reunion of the Class of '64 at Indianapolis University (UIndy) called Indiana Central College in 1964.

Covered bridges are found in rural areas throughout the United States and Canada, but are often threatened by arsonists, vandals, and flooding. In the United States, Pennsylvania has more covered bridges (over 200) than any other state, many of which can be seen in Bedford, Somerset, Washington, Chester and Lancaster Counties. The U.S. states of Vermont and New Hampshire have more covered bridges per square mile than any other place in the world. Oregon has the largest number of historical covered bridges in the western United States.[10] They are also common in places such as Elizabethton, Tennessee; Lane County, Oregon; Madison County, Iowa; Parke County, Indiana; and Blount County, Alabama. Parts of California, Indiana, Ohio, Michigan, Kentucky, Maryland, Minnesota, Virginia, West Virginia, Wisconsin, and the New England states have surviving covered bridges. From: Wikipedia